Louisiana’s Free Global Festival With Moussa Sadou
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概要
French was once treated like something to hide in Louisiana. Today, it’s a doorway into memory, family, and a kind of community pride that you can hear in the streets of Lafayette. I’m joined by Musa Sadoo, a French educator from Niger and the president of this year’s Festival International de Louisiane, and his story is the perfect lens for understanding how language and culture travel and how they take root.
We talk about Musa’s leap to Louisiana in 2002 through CODOFIL, the shock of arriving with limited English, and the small acts of hospitality that made him feel like he’d found the place he was meant to be. From French immersion classrooms to conversations about Cajun and Creole heritage, he shares how French becomes a bridge between grandparents and grandchildren, between local traditions and global connections, and between a newcomer and a city that welcomes him.
Then we go behind the scenes of Festival International de Louisiane, one of the biggest free music festivals in the world. Musa explains why the festival works: diversity across genres and countries, year-round planning, sponsor support, and more than 2,500 volunteers who keep the magic moving. We also cover practical tips for attending, including family-friendly spaces, accessibility considerations, passes, the festival app, and what to know if it’s your first time downtown.
If you care about Lafayette Louisiana culture, Francophone heritage, or how community events can change a city, you’ll get a lot from this conversation. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs a reason to visit Lafayette, and leave a review so more people can find the show.